In Re the Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad

68 N.E. 249, 176 N.Y. 213, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 794
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 13, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 N.E. 249 (In Re the Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad, 68 N.E. 249, 176 N.Y. 213, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 794 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Bartlett, J.

This appeal is certified by the Appellate Division and three questions are submitted for the consideration of this court.

This is a proceeding under the Condemnation Law of the Code of Civil Procedure brought by the plaintiff railroad company to acquire title to the easements or property rights appurtenant to the premises of the defendant owner.

*215 An offer to the defendant was made by the plaintiff company as permitted by the Condemnation Law. No answer was interposed, commissioners were appointed, and the proceedings were conducted thereafter under section 3372 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The commissioners awarded nearly seven times the amount as compensation for the easements or property rights taken as that named in the offer. The court on confirming the report of the commissioners granted the defendant costs to be taxed in pursuance of section 3372.

The defendant presented to the clerk for taxation a bill as follows: Before notice of trial, $10.00 ; after notice of trial, $15.00 ; trial fee, $30.00 : trial occupied more than two days, $10.00; total, $65.00.

The clerk disallowed all of these items and the defendant moved for a retaxation, which was granted, the Special Term allowing all the items thus rejected by the clerk. The plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Division where the order of the Special Term was reversed, the court holding that the defendant was not entitled to any statutory costs.

The learned court opens its opinion with this statement: If the question presented by this appeal were a new one it might well be held that under section 3372 of the Code of Civil Procedure a landowner who is awarded for his property more than was offered to him by the party seeking to condemn it, is entitled to recover costs as though a trial had been had. But a different view has been so often taken by courts of concurrent jurisdiction that we deem a contrary rule to be established by authority.”

This statement is followed by the citation of three authorities which will be presently examined.

It will be profitable to consider at the outset, briefly, the scheme of the Condemnation Law as to trials before the court and the commissioners.

A preceding under this statute is instituted by a petition which is to be taken as a complaint (§ 8360). Upon presenta- 1 tion of the petition the owner of the property may appear and interpose an answer (§ 3365). The issues raised by the petition *216 and answer may be tried by the court or sent to a referee (§ 3367). After such trial judgment shall be entered, pursuant to the direction of the court, or referee, and if in favor of the defendant the petition shall be dismissed, with costs, to be taxed by the clerk at the same rates as are allowed, of course, to the defendant prevailing in an action in the Supreme Court, including allowances for jiroceedings before and after notice of trial (§ 3369).

It is to be observed that the foregoing practice .applies exclusively to the conduct of a case where the defendant serves an answer.

Section 3372 regulates the practice where no answer is interposed, but an offer is either made or not made. This section opens with the following language : “ In all cases where the owner is a resident and not under legal disability to convey title of real property, the plaintiff, before service of his petition and notice, may make a written offer to purchase the property at a specified price, which must within ten days thereafter be filed in the office of the clerk of the county where the property is situated; and which cannot be given in evidence before the commissioners, or considered by them. The owner may, at the time of the presentation of the petition, or at any time previously, serve notice in waiting of the acceptance of plaintiff’s offer, and thereupon the plaintiff may, upon filing the petition, with proof of the making of the offer and its acceptance, enter an order that upon payment of the compensation agreed upon, he may enter into possession of the real property described in the petition, and take and hold it for the public use therein specified; if the order is not accepted, and the compensation awarded by the commissioners does not exceed the amount of the offer, with interest from the time it was made, no costs shall be allowed to either party.”

We now come to that portion of the section applicable to the case at bar: “ If the compensation awarded shall exceed the amount of the offer, with interest from the time it wras made, or if no offer was made, the court shall, in the final order, direct that the defendant recover of the plaintiff the *217 costs of the proceeding, to he taxed by the clerk at the same rate as is allowed, of course, to the defendant when he is the prevailing party in an action in the Supreme Court, including the allowances for proceedings before and after notice of trial, and the court may also grant an additional allowance of costs, not exceeding five percentum upon the amount awarded.”

The remainder of the section has no bearing upon this discussion.

The defendant’s case falls precisely within the letter and spirit of the provision last quoted.

The petitioner served an offer, which defendant did not accept, but on the contrary recovered nearly seven times the amount thereof.

As before pointed out, the Condemnation Law provides for two forms of trial; if an answer is served the trial is before the court or a referee, and the defendant, if successful, is allowed costs as of course in an action.

If there is no answer interposed, no offer made, or if made not accepted and the defendant recovers a larger sum than the amount named therein, or recovers in absence of offer, he is allowed costs “ to be taxed by the clerk at the same rate as is allowed, of course, to the defendant when he is the prevailing party in an action in the Supreme Court, including the allowances for proceedings before and after notice of trial, and the,court may also grant an additional allowance of costs, not exceeding five percentum upon the amount awarded.”

The authorities cited by the learned Appellate Division are as follows: Manhattan Railway Co. v. Kent (80 Hun, 559; affirmed, 145 N. Y. 595, without opinion).

An inspection of the record in the above case shows that the proceeding^was not governed by the provisions of section 3372.

As already pointed out, that section applies only where the owner is a resident and not under any legal disability to convey title to real property.

The record shows, by the petition instituting the proceedings, that there were certain persons and classes of persons *218 not in being, who upon their coming into being would have interests in the property sought to be condemned, and upon the presentation of the petition application was made to the court for the appointment of an attorney to represent such persons and classes of persons in the proceedings. Such attorney was duly appointed and he interposed an answer on behalf of the possible infants not in being.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 N.E. 249, 176 N.Y. 213, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-brooklyn-union-elevated-railroad-ny-1903.